"Initializing vapor-transmission sequence. Engaging vapor...
engaging vapor.... Three... two... one.... "Welcome to the Odyssey."
Your watch reads 1:07, a.m. or p.m., who knows? And you've just
escaped through a black hole to the Andrio System with gender-swapping
Dramatica. You had to get away from the Bomb-Bomb Boys and the Jockstrap
Girls somehow. But now you're feeling paranoid, searching through
the flashing lights for hapless Gerrold (you thought he could find
his own way home) and sainted Eva, the one person who can show you
wrong from right. All you want is a little clarity and compassion
in this ambiguous world, but some suckerface is trying to drain
your time and energy, and your former lover dreams in digital and
likes it.
What you need is a superpill to make you feel better. Yeah, a superpill
to make everything all right. But don't let the radio see you swallow
it. Then the Opticon will know your plans...
Or something like that. For those of us who felt a perverse hint
of disappointment when the world failed to spin off its axis in
the new millennium, and life remained so... "last century,"
Orgy introduces the first album of the year 2000 that truly sounds
like it was made in and for a new era. The 30th century, that is,
according to "The Odyssey" from the band's new album Vapor
Transmission.
Not only does Vapor Transmission sound like the synthesis of every
crucial youth-music movement of the past 30 years, but the ultra-vivid
songs are so heavily peopled and rich with imagery they could easily
form the basis of a video game, a screenplay or even a musical (and
may still). More importantly, they draw open the screen of a listener's
mind. From there, it's up to the individual to project his or her
own future legend like the one above.
Singer Jay Gordon knows a few things about creating alternate universes
for listeners. Of Orgy's platinum-selling debut, 1997's Candyass,
he once claimed he and his bandmates guitar-synthesist Amir Derakh,
guitarist Ryan Shuck, bassist Paige Haley and drummer Bobby Hewitt
had just "conjured up a bunch of lies and fairy tales."
Vapor Transmission, therefore, must be another engaging batch of
fantasies set to the band's patented "death pop," right?
Not even close. Like the world Orgy projects on the new album, everything
you know about the band is wrong.
"The songs are definitely based on a lot of real-life factions
this time," admits Gordon. "It's about scenes from my
life and other people's lives that I've witnessed or heard about.
There's a lot more truth involved." But he's changed the names
to shield the not-so-innocent? Wrong again. "Gerrold is a real-life
character. He's a friend of ours from New Orleans," says Gordon,
by way of example. "Where's Gerrold," is the track that
closes the album with this unhinged bit of stream-of-consciousness:
"Bright lights flashing. Cover my eyes. I'm feeling sick. I'm
feeling paranoid." Likewise, "Eva" has a basis in
reality: "Eva is our producer Josh Abraham's late mother,"
he reveals.
And will anyone recognize themselves in the unflattering portrait
Gordon renders in "Suckerface"? "Raised by the queens
your mother paid. How does that make you a human god?" he sings,
while Haley's filtered bass seemingly vomits out the song's gargantuan
riff in agreement. "Suckerface' is a label for a lot of people,"
Gordon admits. "With specific lines, some people might think,
Oh, he had to have written that about my situation,' but I'm sure
a lot of people feel a familiarity with the things I'm saying in
that song."
With the number of characters inhabiting the songs, the album almost
sounds like a scene report, in which Gordon passes through various
rooms at a party and comments on the melodrama.
"That's exactly what it's like," he agrees. "It's
just me taking an artistic impression of what I've seen. I wanted
people to see that there's a lot more than just the music happening
on this record." Again, the party analogy is more literal than
you might expect, according to Shuck, who also contributed lyrics.
"You're listening to us literally hanging out, episodes of
our last year. The lyrics are about real life, even though they're
put in a science-fiction setting. Orgy lives in a make-believe science-fiction
world I'm gonna have to admit that. I hope when people listen to
the album they can come into that world a little bit.
"The majority of the album was done at what we call The Clarinda
House,' this big mansion in Tarzana where we all lived for three
months," clarifies Derakh. "There was a gym separate from
the house that we turned into the recording studio so it could be
running 24 hours a day and people in the house wouldn't be disturbed.
"And we had what we call our lurkers,'" he continues.
"Those were friends and relatives who were hanging around (whoever
was there visiting) and they turned out to be inspiration for some
things." "Yeah," admits Hewitt, "we know...
well, Jay' knows a lot of weirdos people who would show up at four
in the morning, out of their heads and have these ideas'. And next
thing we knew there was a song written about one of them."
In that hang-out continuum, Orgy somehow found time to substantially
build on the cybernetic-rock experiments they'd started with Candyass
and later honed through trial and error on the road with the original
Family Values tour and on subsequent headlining tours. "Playing
live really cemented what we are," says Haley. "It helped
us to truly discover ourselves and our sound. And what we discovered
is that live, no matter what we did, we couldn't keep down the fact
that we are a heavy band."
"Now we're much more sure of what we wanna accomplish and
what our style of music is and what our way of dressing is,"
says Hewitt. "The first record seems like an experiment."
"We didn't really want to depart from where we started,"
amends Derakh, "but we definitely wanted to take a step forward
with this record. There was a conscious effort to make it heavier
in some ways, without losing our sound." Gordon agrees, citing
"Fiction (Dreams In Digital)" as an example of Orgy's
ability to seamlessly blend contrasting styles: "With Orgy
you get the heavy and the catchy. We've all been in some really
heavy bands before, but with Orgy, the premise was to do something
different. I think every band starts with that in mind, and then
they end up finding their niche. And I think ours involves making
the pop world see things in a different way. Just because it's on
the radio doesn't mean it's shitty."
In a couplet from "Opticon," Gordon fires the first shot
in this latest pop revolution, drawing a line between the new guard
and the old guard in the process: "Those neon eyes make mom
and dad think we've lost our minds. They're just terrified of all
new things." Vapor Transmission is full of such startling visions
of a future world in which communications technology has been turned
against us, becoming a tool for government surveillance rather than
personal convenience. Gordon doesn't think the vision is that far
from reality.
"I'm a fan of technology, but it can be used for the wrong
purposes. Things are crazy. They're coming up with new ways of doing
things all the time. Soon you'll be able to talk to someone on the
phone in your car and see the person you're talking to. I'm sure
the government will love to tap in on that. And Opticon' is the
eye that sees all the paranoid, Big Brother thing. Like a satellite
can pinpoint a soccer ball on a soccer field, for instance. It's
checking out what you're wearing. It's my version of how things
are."
And on "Eyes," Gordon sings, "Radio waves hitting
your brain on the phone. I can see what's on your mind, because
you're never alone. I'm the eyes in your radio." The song's
not only based on high-tech paranoia, but a childhood memory.
"[In Eyes'], the transmission from the radio is sent to the
Opticon. The eyes in the radio are looking at you at all times while
you're in your car. Like when I sing Painted in chrome Max Factor,'
it can see all these things. When I was a kid, I used to think the
radio was talking to me," says Gordon, laughing at the innocence
of the song's inspiration. And lest you think Vapor Transmission
deals exclusively in paranoia, personal politics and future shock,
check out "Eva." The song not only forms the heart of
the record, but could be Orgy's most poignant song yet. "I'm
not as fearless as you," Gordon sings of producer Abraham's
late mother. "Still I pretend that you're still standing by
to tell me wrong from right. Never got a chance to say goodbye."
The longing is palpable.
"She passed and Josh didn't really get to talk to her,"
says the singer. "It was a really heavy thing in my life. We
put our band together in Eva's garage. She was a great lady, and
I wrote the song through Josh's eyes." Still, Eva's the exception
on Vapor Transmission the album's other inhabitants don't get such
sympathetic treatment. It's almost as if Gordon is holding her up
as an ideal for the rest of the characters.
"Groups of people can get together and be quite vicious; it's
not cool," says Gordon. "So there are a lot of references
to how I feel about that. I'm not bitter about anything, though.
I may not be happy with some people's actions, but I'd be just as
ignorant to harbor hostility towards them." Derakh has a more
succinct theory about Gordon's more caustic lines: "I think
that's from being in L.A. there are a lot of fucking idiots here,"
he says, laughing. "We have to deal with so much bullshit,
whether it's girls or... there's always some kind of drama going
on. And I think that's where a lot of that comes from. I think it's
cool, because even though it's not specific, it's our way of getting
back."
Shuck shares a similar but more visceral attitude about Vapor Transmission:
"The album just punches you in the face, but in a manner like,
Yeah, I'll knock you out and take your girlfriend's lipstick.'"
Welcome to the Odyssey, suckerface
SUPPORTORGY.COM BIO (this is a very unprofessional bio written
by us but it may have some info you could use):
ORGY formed in late 1997 and soon after got a deal with KoRn's label
Elementree. Their debut, Candyass, was released in August 18th 1998.
By mid-September the band hit the road with KoRn, Rammstein, Ice
Cube and Limp Bizkit on the Family Values tour and released Stitches
to radio. By doing that tour ORGY had the opportunity to be heard
by thousands of people every night. Around the first week of Nov.
the band shot their first video for Blue Monday in an old power
plant in the Los Angeles area. The video premiered on MTV's 120
minutes the end of November and a week later ORGY made their first
live TV appearance on Fashionably Loud. Soon after Blue Monday was
shown almost daily on Rocks Off and was even seen on Say What. It
wasn't long before MTV decided Blue Monday was a "Buzzworthy"
video! It became a close call for TRL and then made it on the countdown
in February of '99 and stayed there until April when it was retired.
The band started it's second tour in Feb '99 opening for Love and
Rockets and in April they joined Sugar Ray for the Campus Invasion
Tour. The band decided to re-release Stitches and a video was filmed
for it at the end of April. It World Premiered on TRL June 9th,
with a call in from Ryan and Amir who discussed how unpleasant the
gymbal used in the video was :) ORGY set out on their first headlining
tour with Videodrone and various other bands opening. Once this
tour was over ORGY went back into the studio to record their highly
anticipated follow up, Vapor Transmission. The first single, Fiction
was released to radio August 22nd, 2000 and quickly made it into
the top 20. A video was made and world premiered on TRL August 31st
with the guys present. They informed everyone about the upcoming
"ORGY Ball" record release party. The ORGY Ball was held
October 13th in Los Angeles with tons family, friends and fans in
attendance (so many showed up in fact some were not allowed in).
Vapor Transmission was released October 10th and debuted on Billboards
top 200 at number 16. ORGY hit the road for a small headlining and
radio show tour in November and December. The next single Opticon
was released January 30th, 2001 to radio and the band went back
on the road for their next headlining tour in February and March.
The tour was very successful until Amir became sick forcing them
to cancel the last few dates and a tour with Papa Roach. A few weeks
later the band was ready to hit the road again. After a some Radio
Shows it was once again time for Orgy to head back into the studio
to begin recording their highly anticipated third CD.
+ Punk Statik Paranoia Biog
// Candyass Biog // Vapor
Transmission Biog +
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